Outdoor Treatment and Therapy Blog

Self-mutilation and emo

February 21st, 2008

Self-mutilation has been popular with kids. It’s not a good news especially with the “emo” thing going on. Teenagers hurt themselves for a reason or two. They cut, bite, hit and even bruise themselves. These teenagers lack the capacity to deal with the pain. Instead of really confronting their personal issues, they resort to a much drastic action. It even pains parents more seeing their kids hurt themselves.  Thus, parents should get professional help, like an intervention from a psychologist or psychiatrist.


Activities in wilderness camps

February 13th, 2008

Being in a wilderness camp is a very positive growth experience. Teenagers get to face challenges that nature has to offer. Amazingly, nature has this “miracle” effect on teenage behavior. Wilderness program includes activities such as:

>remote living
>outdoor education
>team building
>structured daily activities
>experiential therapy
>expeditions
>exploration


Wilderness therapy

January 5th, 2008

Wilderness therapy is actually an experiential program that takes place in a remote outdoor setting or the wilderness. The program includes therapy, counseling, education, leadership training and primitive living challenges. Thus, kids learn honesty, responsibility, accountability, openness and awareness.  The purpose of such a therapy is to remove teenagers from negative influences, and let them discover the safety that the outdoor environment provides them.


Teen silence

January 2nd, 2008

Teen silence is common as a cold. It’s even harder than the real virus. Teenage kids could turn cold for a very long time, and this kind of action is really affecting parents. Somehow families get used to shouting and yelling, silence is the only defense that kids have. It’s even hurtful when they don’t talk than have them talking back to their parents. Thus, parents should learn to reach out and talk. If the coldness continues, give a little space. Kids will eventually come around.


Dealing With The Risk of Suicide in Wilderness, Boot Camp and Residential Programs

December 26th, 2007

Counselors and therapists as well as medical and mental health professionals are not necessarily more qualified to evaluate and deal with a risk of suicide than a reasonable person.

Physicians are trained to diagnose and treat medical conditions, medicate if necessary, and admit patients to holding or psychiatric facilities. Evaluation, intervention and treatment of a suicide risk are specialized skills that require training and supervised experience.

Program personnel should consider themselves responsible for the outcome, when that program and their staff assume the authority to intervene or dismiss the risk of suicide.

The evaluation of a suicide risk is in fact an intervention and that intervention should not end once the child’s risk is no longer considered immediate. Consultation with parents and obtaining second opinions from qualified professionals are reasonable standards of practice.

A minimally qualified professional to deal with a suicide risk would have:

~  a masters degree in a mental health field,
~  licensure in a mental health field,
~ 16 hours of continuing education training in crisis intervention (with emphasis on suicide and violence risk), and
~ 6 months of supervised experience and training working with suicidal adults and children on regular basis.

Read the rest of this entry »


Borderline Personality Traits In A Wilderness Therapy Program

December 26th, 2007

Failure to recognize Borderline Personality Traits (BPT) in a wilderness program can lead to chronic problems and can have a destructive impact on a child’s life. Many  students with the initial behavioral symptoms of this disorder will go undetected primarily because they hide these behaviors from parents and family members.

They are generally not evident until the child is under stress and they are observed continuously in a structured setting such as a therapeutic boarding school, psychiatric hospital, residential treatment or wilderness program.

In a wilderness program, a student may not demonstrate all of their symptoms until the third or fourth week. In severe cases they will be uncompensated within a week.

Behaviors That Will Be Encountered In The Field:

~ Intense emotional pain (shame, guilt, fear, loneliness, emptiness, longing)

~ Rapid mood swings (anger, sad, fearful to happy).

~ Failure by others to meet their needs are interpreted and reported to others as personal, intentional, neglectful or abusive.
Read the rest of this entry »


Bulimia & Anorexia in a Wilderness Therapy Program

December 26th, 2007

A wilderness program is more likely to detect bulimia than a therapeutic boarding school, psychiatric hospital, residential treatment or wilderness program. In a wilderness program, a student may not demonstrate all of their symptoms until the third or fourth week.

Students with Bulimia and Anorexia have four primary problem areas. These include:

~ Control
~ Argument and Debate
~ Secretive Behaviors
~ Guilt and Shame
~ Obsession over weight

Behavior That Will Be Encountered In The Field:

>> Hiding food.

>> Arguing over certain foods they can or cannot eat.

>> Comments that they are fat, unattractive and need to loose weight despite evidence to the contrary.

>> A pattern of drifting to the perimeter of the group or asking to leave the group to void their bladder soon after eating an adequate or large meal and then purging their meal without staff awareness.

Read the rest of this entry »


Organizations That Promote Adventure, Wilderness, Outdoor Behavior Therapy, Schools, Programs & Research

December 26th, 2007

MRI (Mentor Research Institute)
OBHIC (Outdoor Behavioral Health Industry Council)
OBHRC (Outdoor Behavioral Health Research Council)
NATWC (National Association Of Therapeutic Wilderness Camps)
NATSAP (National Association Of Therapeutic Schools and Programs)
WRC (Wilderness Research Center, University of Idaho)
AEE (Association For Experiential Education)
OEREC (Outdoor Education: Research & Evaluation Center)
WEA (Wilderness Education Association)
OPISU (Outdoor Program. Idaho State University)
Experientia
Naropa


Danger Checklist for Wilderness Programs

December 20th, 2007

Psychological trauma, physical injuries or death of children in programs are invariably the result of trauma, abuse, negligence and/or accidents. The following is a checklist of factors that are necessary to insure that a wilderness program is safe.

The risk decreases as more of the following that are present.

~ The program is licensed or regulated by a state agency that is empowered to monitor, inspect and investigate complaints.

~ Staff who are responsible for the health and well-being of children are screened, trained or certified as competent to provide services within the standards of practice of related intervention programs.

~ The program’s therapeutic activities were developed by or approved by a licensed psychologist who is qualified in behavioral health and safety.

~ The safety and well-being of your child is the direct responsibility of a qualified and licensed medical or mental health professional.

Read the rest of this entry »


Difference: Wilderness Therapy and Boot Camp Programs

December 20th, 2007

Before exploring the use of force in detail, a distinction must be drawn between a “wilderness therapy program” and a “juvenile boot camp program”.

Wilderness therapy should not be confused with a juvenile boot camp program. The philosophy of wilderness therapy is to allow children to experience the force of nature as their teacher and to avoid staff use of force and restraint.

Boot camp programs are designed and run with a high degree of interpersonal confrontation as well as physical and psychological aggression toward students. Wilderness therapy programs are designed to create therapeutic opportunities and choices when students are confronted with nature and inevitable realities when living in a primitive environment.

The fact that a student must gather wood and build a fire in order to cook (i.e. wilderness therapy) is different than screaming and intimidating a child if they don’t do what they are told (i.e. a boot camp).

Obtaining control and compliance through the use of intimidation and coercion is characteristic of a boot camp program. Wilderness therapy and boot camps are distinctly different and incompatible approaches to working with youth.

To read the full article resource, please click here.


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